3? THE ADVERTISER. - crT Thursday by 5E0THEE & HACKEE, AnVEItTjlSsING HATES. Proprietors. Spate. f ,w 1 m I Per I isr jJtenWt. Hear. : McPheron IJlook, upStuirM lnak. inehca incites ADVERTISER. HfcOS 6ft 8 100 B ry 12'liL. NEBRASKA. tSlAClMK. !Minafces- ! 4 00 1 (4) 4 w sue a 7W M in 5 m is ce is eo s o 10?.. tu lti . .s, in Advdn.se: . SM 00 131 ATIER OX EVERY PAGE - . imMrn. ,r t jit, .- 7AX.K TO EflCKAUS. r.rsf-d pathway walked i cr . beat o one qaest; rT,v ..had asked lo share i, ft the city walls r. '.or speed ; and oft, . - )c;Uie sunset tints, - i .-:!, careless of tbe - - - -' .mm-2 . m ESTABLISHED 185 C. Oldost Paper in tie State A i Such veils BROWNVILIiE. NEBRASKA. THTJBSDAY, AUGUST 27, 1874 YOL. 19.-!T0. 9 IiegaladvertVsemontB at l?al rates: Onesqear OSltiie or Nonpareil space, or lessjflsst ISsertiaB J1.00; each subsequent Insertion, 50c g-Alltransclent advertisements must be pal orln advance. l?orJ i e.i vy-fiUing dews. , ! s came words that gathered in their orgies. Such yells I can light as well as die. This spot might we1.' strike terror Intothe bos- I leave not! Here my bones shall lie om of tho-e unaccustomed, lo thorn, j teaching with yours! And should To our Bcouts these were hut martial I either of you escnpe you will carry music strain6 which waked their the tidings of my escape to my re watchfulnese and etruntlfeir iron maining relatives. Bemoustranee proved fruitless; the t r . t. if-1 r hearts. .,u-kntog faith at tranies. From ttieir oatymta if. had been always on jthVfFonUKi and therefore well praaiiced inajll the sub tility, and craft aOHnr.fflg. n" well as knowing tba 'feroriM id blood -thirsty pereawee f he savage. ; i i nous as fceapake; en-Hl from 111, . m-., ujwaug. as day ii ,m mined T.Aat !fii (They were ttoewssbr rtlriirrvrif3H bv-tf foe;; andiwitbout gle wou not f jscalpiajpfcnlfel1! -u ', ions 'small pr tie Jfti 'UJaaVagsirJa r i i mh':nm'ni'M1t l!SEoTt1ying lur ,io -stained mercy-sent - vi r. ' ivliC'l v It!' r'v- -lopes of Bethlc- i -trti sli epberi, aad his &61 &W St V -v., KtrtM4U harp, mornia;' aad tbe Ui s'jr- l8laii'BSoal o i;ing glory. aad MajpafT' - -p:ondor9 -of the raifen' .'. l' :nv looked aw mll '0" rAatl li.Tf. OMalffier lAjalMKc 1 1 tjSmMbbHpxi cMaHth 'i4Wa-ait T .fjMCiitao - .. . brciiiic d his hopes In Are. i- glo juilng on th Mils; r Sriglitcn. In the sky, till th" wun of Klghteoosnoss ,t:. healing in htewlnjpj- s patli tliey comnaoned till kt r MCheu at. and their rBiitriea, ut : abide with vm," prevailed. !. 1 o'er the simple board, .1 -nee for a space; bat, lo, Vies the bread, iukI blesses It. -:.d like a dteam tbe vail is ' L -r& and master frosn their hand, his voice, liiaaelf. : aien at his feet, and fatal . of oJJ ; It may not be : ipty, but his low is there, 'i: Presence in their bearC ' .sr ! bear our ery. "W too r ,., . lers on life's roegb path ; ' - -.II unchangeably the same. -. and let us walk with thee; - i ! the words of heavenly life. n. within as. nnd the day Jay-utr riies in onr heart-. ' with us, rending tin- vail . i iee from the loving eyt of f-lthj - to the with thee. I ' iiarfc ' ; afiihaV UertJBJ Mmfttmu with thee, I TWtPSOb 'JLTS. T m HKeiy to oe inning of their desperate strug- victims to the several oceas- of warriors ih tlilsaareof by MeSiae'-of some long prostrate trtv. cover themselves w:th the hear am? eIlow leaf a'i! again b'ave their hiding-place when their uninvited visitors had disap peared. For food tbey dejwnded upon jerked venison and cold corn bread, with which their knapsacks had been well stored. Fire they dared not kindle, and the report of one of their rifles would bring: upon them the entire force of tbe Indians. For drink they depended on some rain water which still stood in excavations of the rocks, but in a few days this store was ex hausted, and McClelland and White must abandon their enterprise or find a new supply. To accomplish this most hazardous affair McClelland, being the leader, resolved to make the attempt With his trusty rifle in his grasp, and two oanteens'strung acrjss his shoulders. be cautiously descended to the prairie and skirting the hills on the north as much aft possible within the hazel thickets, he strnek & course for tli.e Hock hocking river. He reached it margin, and turning an abrupt point of Ibe hill, he found a beantifo! fountain of limpid water, now known as the Cld Spring, with in a few feet of the river. He filled his canteens stnd returned in safety to his watchful companion. It was now determined to have a fresh supply of water every day, and this duty was to be performed alternately. On oih' of those ocea;onr. after tt.liitfc.hiui fiilad hi atuUren&, ho two scouts matured their plans for a vigorous (Ibfence opposing craft to craft, expedient to expedient, and an unerring fire of the deadly rifle. The attack commenced in front, where, from the narrow bnck-bone of the Mount, the savages had to advance in single file, but where thej- could avail themselves of the rockB and treps however. In advancing, the warrior must be marnentariiyexnose fffenffiffirgtrr end retreat, for they might readily lose their way, or accidently fall on the enemy this being highly probable, if not inevitable. An hour's consulta tion decided their plans, and it was agreed that the girl, from her intimate knowledge of their localities, should lead the advance a few steps. Another advantage might be gained bj this arrangement: forin'case thev should fall in with some outpost, the girl's knowledge of the Indian tongue would perhaps enable her to deceive the sentinel; and so the sequal proved, for scarcely had they de scended one hundred feet, when a low whist from the girl warned them oi present danger. The scouts sunk fegaa lyAwuprgt fig.aal was given-tliem ndltavnahsrei! fort'lre Ifnerrm scouts. by the girl, whose absence for more After braveihr miriutaining-thersffm than aquar$r Of an hour began" to In front, and keeping the enemy in excite themnst serious apprehensions, check, they discovered a new danger.) At length she again appeared, and threatening them. The wary foe now told them that sJie Ilad removed two I,nTr'aTinrnBnv mir inrar'iarHiM if iir vss"" "jiiyiHiaF's."" isKoepHirwraarecisflivJ TV-lWInnni..,Xl HJT "BEr' U L - - ' -7 - -- r m, 1 sm. ' - :it4fiittv.titLir;ifiii;iiiiii T:..rwj.pafc. . .- . " i m. ; w-T-. ., 1 -rnnstawrrrnnnwiAWf f rwOT v ine iRamfi w.nv mi nnrtriWnn rr - Trj j -- vv ....... ,. tl'HE LOTUS BL, AK03EK. HT TDEO. txlto:?. A Brahmin on a lotus pod Once wrote the holy name of God. Then planting it, he asked in prayer For some new fruit, unknown and fair. A Slave near by, who bore a load, Fell fainting on the dusty road. The Brahmin, pitying, straightway ran And lifted up the fallen man. The deed scarce dona, he stood aghast At touching one beneath his caste. "Behold," he cried, "I am unclean ; My hands have clasped the vile and mean !" God saw the shadow on his face And wrought a miracle cf grace. The burled seed a-ese from death .-ITW Miff mumi.TJi ill-, I OFFICIAL TAPER OF THE COUNTY "Whureon-these mystic words were seen : sequence of the great strike, are com ing. Indeed, one hundred and fifty of them landed here last week, and I took the trouble to see them. They are generally good people, though la mentably ignorant. They lived the life of animals, almost, on the great estates that held them, with no earth ly opportunities for developementin any direction. One of them told me that his entire family, consisting of himself and wife and eight children, lived in a "cottage" of two rooms, in which there were no floors, the entire family sleeping together in one room ! In this man's family waB one rather pretty girl of eighteen, who every year had to go away to work, living to the mark. When they are under oath, when they have sworn to tell the truth, the whole truth and noth ing but the truth, and when the swearing is invested with all the sol emnity of legal forms, the' must swear. Then will Mr. Frank AToul- ton, who has letters in his possession, be compelled to either produce them or swear to their contents ; then will the people who know things, but who have kept what they know to them selves from motives of delicacy or in terest, be compelled tostate the truth, and it will all out ; then will the pub lic be satisfied and not till then. Till then, good people who read these epistles rest. You will get nothing gCfiaiKtanjeitmifiawgcgisfflBt I '-'-'- -aa courts. , - "Cannot Tell lVhat She UelieTes." First, count men'ail made every preparation to attack them in the fiank, which would he most successfully and fatally done by reaching the insulated rock Ivincr in one of the ravines on the southern hill side. This rock onee gained by the Indians they could bring the scouts under point blank shot of the rifle, and without a possibility of es cape. Our brave scouts saw the hopeless ness of their situation, which nothing could avert but brave companions and an unerring shot ; them they had not but the brave never despair. With this certain fate resting upon them, the had continued us calm and as calculating, aud as unwearied as the strongest desire of venereance on a treacherous foe could produce. Soon McClellan saw a tall and swarthy figure preparing to leap from a cover so near the fatal roek that a single bound must reach it. and all hope be destroyed. He felt thaE all depended on one advantageous shot ; although but one inch of the warrior's body was exposed, and that at a dis tance of one hundred yards, he re solved to risk all. Coolly he raised the rifle to hi eye, carefully shading the light with his hand, he drew a head o sure that he felt conciou- it won J do ; he touched the hair trigger with hi finger the tcnnfinolc n-lm .,.,.- Mr n. .1 wv...v..v.o niiu ne uii-acuy in iiieir route, to a point some hundred feet distant. The descent was noiselessly resum edthe level gained, and the scouts followed their intrepid pioneer for half a mile in the most profound si lence, when the barking of a small dog within a few feet apprised them of a new danger. The almost simultaneous clicks of me scouts' niles were heard by the the girl, who rapidly approached them, and stated that they were now in the midst of the Indians' wig wam's, and their lives depended upon the most profound silence and im plicitly following her footsteps. A moment afterwards, the girl was accosted 03- a squaw from an opening in a wigwam. She replied in the In dian language, and without stopping pressed forward. In a short lime she stopped, aud as sured the scouts that the villaere was cleared, and that thej' were now in safety. She knew that every pass leading out of the prairie was safely guarded by Indians, aud at once re solved to adopt the bold adventure of passing through the very centre of their villaere as the least hazardous. -. : or7equalcastQr- Tlien cfmnt?yourself. tire least and last.1' TheFrahmin, with bewildered brain, Beheld the will of God writ plain. Transfigured then in sudden light, The Slave stood sacred In His sight ! Thereafter in the Brahmin's breast Abode God's peace, and he was bleot. things on those estates may he imag ined. The wages paid to laborers in tisBis ceurt fcnv" seemetl to Shrtnrn ur inous, and they were anxious to get west and get it. "Why," said one of them to me, "they say we'll never get less than Hew Vr lHflHMI Mil T? ' -4BS Plymouth Church. intends to clear itapastocguilty-or not gullig-vj.tihgj courTwhIch are above- nersmral lfk- Edltor 2febrakA Advertiser. As these "refreshing showers and" cooler days bring tone to my nerves which have been so exhausted while passing through the "fiery furnace" of this fearful summer, I resume my pen which I had so utterly aban doned, and in resuming it I want a little talk with your readers. I have written for the ADVBiwisait lo! these many years, yet many of its renders cannot fell what I believe. Well, what of it? It is not my ohjeofc in writing to tell my belief, nor to conceal it. For persons to bo contin ually parading thrtr faith before the iEijjeQntt1-.gd OuE NEWTOEE LETTSE. Feminine Gambling Emigration Oleomr.garine BoeclierTlton Bus-ijlt'SH. Correspondence Xebraaku Ad varifcer. Kvr Yokk, August 11, 1871. F2MIXINE GAKBLTKG. It has been generally supposed that the spirit of gambling did not rest in the feminine soul, to any alarming extent; but this like many other gen eral suppositions, is a mistake. Let a woman onee get the passion for gam bling Used in her, and she is the worst and most persistent gambler on the face of the globe. It takes full possession of her it becomes a part of her very nature it is a madness, which only succumbs to the severest jwssible treatment. The fashionable women of the great cities fall into it easily. The life they lead is of a nature that makes it al most a necessity to them. The "sea son" of fashionable gaiety, which sa T.ER ABTEXTUS.E. AIr J- id lt- ai tr ies ie 3t a- ot id If, I 'ittorl tbl em rwj tbS the year 1790. the bioek- -r okade alove the mouth . . h oek 1 ng r i ver , was a f ron - ' . r the hardy pioneers of i. of our State from the '' f,.e. Hocking to the Scioto, '. Ohio river to ou north- t The nature wore her un- 3 ,-ery of dark and thick : "persed with green and - . . as. Then the axe of the - Lad not been heard in the -, nor the plough of the tiian marred tne beauties of rairies. Among the many suriant valleys, that of the c, iing was pre-eminent lor richest gifts and the portion rt in Lancaster now stands ar.-pi as the most luxuriant tr que, and because the seat : l.an village, at a period so J the "memory of man run "2J thereto." ? green sward of the prairie . many a rude gambol of the aud here, too, was many an b"o of the warriors of one of ifc)E! powerful tribes, taking: coun- fak'Im&L "war path" upon some weak or 'Asfci:?i.le3s frontier post. Upon tuee war stirring occasions. eiice reaeueu the little srarri- m - asmwfcovo the mouth of the Hock .'tlBg, that the Indians were gath eriSph f rce somewhere up the val lerjjifc th purpose of striking a ter- ;rrfciBMd fatal biow ou one of the few tier, d defences of the whites. far; hIm i hemnwr eamo down but in ulaee of w moment waiohlwg the limpid striking fire it crushed hisJlintintOiai 'ingriver andtnftar three dovs marchil MUmiinf u it noji ,ln. .. .O .lnmBt-X J,..,jfSt"K--' " -"W S0ft!V.,..t'gffi!f."i- ' x. .1,1- jj , ,.., tm ic SP""Uk - ujpr-J$JWiiJft"Vto''liuM,-5'!i '- - - -at - c-"wjifc mre-nai u,)!urnUtEI IIJ M.iildluu 5r i. .,lr V.fil ."&!-- -l.Till Jt. i- ,f.u ,,.... .. I,1t. !.-! I jmes. '"S"""' '"'..raa wtwwii, tuuetcjignL. -ti'iuuuufju ,uj ,iut jrwc "Lnaisayagjaj jii.''"" - 1Rw,Uew- ill fit5jatfsJBB')niusaiLoailh :fche Nfabai usickwbafbwijlH m$ tiefd ear, and upon turning round h- r.-,u!d adj'ist another !'snt, he proceed- vr-n"ted ed to the task with the utmost com- i tI,e rescued girl proved to he the si commences in October and November, The result proved the correctness of ' 1P nothing but a whirl of excitement her juderment. I from four p. in till long after mid- They now kept a cnursp f )r the "ijrht. There is the opera, the great ?!.r..n!r theaters, the mrtie?. reontion nndr luvunrnvw. - -- . - - , -- --. i n . -. hnllu nrfl 11. Jlinncnrir? nf.li of frtfma nTT cS. ...j, .... u ......,Ui.U UWIEl iuiuis Ui th o. smostr exci tlng3 IssipationiiinJh ladyHvhosihasspuriallniiglfbSduth U'MO, being guhied bv-theHoal fourshillin' a day! At that, I can earn a house for myself." Some day that man will not oniy own a house, but it will stand in the centre of 160 acres of good Nebraska land. OLEOMA SO ARI XE has goue up. You remember it. It was a proeess for making butter out of grea?. For a time it oreated a sensa tion here. Samnles of butter made in this way were siiown, and they were good. Well, they ought to be, for they were actually butter. The "inventor" of the process kept up the stir till he sold the patent for the Pa cific States tx a verdant Califoruian, who did actually pay $10,00) down and gave his note for $65,000. A company was organised in San francisco, and 50,000 worth of stoek was actually disposed of, when the inventor appeared and wanted the re maining S65.000. There was an ex plosion. The process was tried and found to be entirely worthless, and the rumpus that ensued was some thing terrific. The antecedents of the "inventor" were looked up, and it was discovered tiiat he was an old speculator in this style of enterprise, and that "Oleomargarine" was neither tii lirs or Ins worst swindle. Exit crease butter. The.cows are raiustaS i." d the conteriinlaledTr-'Ck : hTid "1 "" "m e : i wfi o naiTil ra nTf w n??" an I JtmmcV. was held by the garrison?! j anafafouts WQre sent up theHock- k5!E ir- order to ascertain the rl5? ci the foe, and the probable T paitW attack. Im.Uje month of Octoier, and one .of tlsjyaV.uiest days of our Indian e&BHMr, two men could have been seKyrging out oi the thick plum H aadifezel bushes skirtinir the pra4gtnnd stealthily climbiug the cawrfidechvity of that ntost remark - xWeroromontory now known as itPIisant, whose western sum- nslfive- a commanding view to the ejriwvhat is doing en the prairie. mence was gainea by our two rou. and hardy scouts, and is point they carefully ob- he movements taking place rairie. Every day brought s:nn of warriors to thoee 1- sembled, and everv day the itnessed from their eyrie the cing, leaping, running and g the deadly tomahawk by rnrs The old sachems look- jwith indifference the squaws, most part, engaged in their drudgeries, and tbe papooses sting all the noisy and way- oy of childhood. arrival of any new nartv of rs was hailed by the terrible hoop, which, striking the rural f Mount Pieasant, was driven t, A vnnM MAMmBB OH', IfP rr, an JNBe raaejarJats te BH aip thTi? tB;sK If inS I S saw two squaws within a few feet of him these, upon turn ine the jut of the hill, had t-tiddenly come upon him. Tke elder squaw gave one of thorn far reaching whoops peculiar to the Indian?. White at onee comprehended his perilous situation for if tire alarm should reach the camp, lie and his companion must inevitably perish. Pelf-preservation compelled him to inflict a noiseless death upon the sqnaws, and in such manner as to leave no trace behind. Ever rapid in thought and prompt in action, he sprang upon his victims with the ra pidity and power of a panther, and grasping a throat of each, with one bound he sprang into the Hockhock ing. and rapidly thrust thehead of the elder woman under the water, and making Ftrong sS6rts to submerge the other, who. however, powerfully re sisted. Iuring the short struggle the young female addressed him in his own Ian" guage. though almost in inarticulate sounds. Releasing his hold she in formed him that ten years before she had been made a prisoner, on Grave Creek fiats and that the Indians, in her presence, butchered her mother and two sisters, and that an only re maining brother had been captured with her, who succeeded on the sec ond night in making his escape. What had become of him, she knew not. During the narrative White, unob served by the girl, had let go his grasp on the elder squaw, whose body soon floated where it would not, prob ably, soou be found. He now direct ed the girl hastily to follow hn, and with his usual energy and speed, pushed for the Mount. Tbey had scarcely gone two hun dred yards from the spring, before the alarm cry was heard some quarter of a mile down the stream. It was supposed that some warriors, return ing from a hunt, struck the Hock- hocking just as tbe body floated past. White and the girl succeeded in reaching the Mount, where McClel land had been no indifferent spectator to the commotion among the Indians, as the prairie parties of warriors were seen to strike off in every direction; nd before White aud the girl had ar rived, a party of ,me twenty war riors had already gained the extern aechvity of the Mount, and were cau- """" scmamg, carefully under cover. Soon the two scouts saw th thy face of the foe as they elided' from tree to tree, and roMr t 1. .... the whole base of the Mount was sur rounded, and all hopes of escape out off. posure, casting many a furtive glance toward the fearful point. Suddenly he saw the warrior stretching every muscle for the fearful leap, aud with the agility of a deer he mde the fear ful spring; instead of reaching the rock he sprang ten feet in the air, and gave one terrific yell; he fell upon the hill. He had evidently received a death shot from some unknown hand. A hundred voices from below re echoed the terrible shout, and it was evident tbey had lost a favorite war rior, as well ss been foiled for a time in their most important movement. A very few moments proved that the advantage so mysteriously gained would be of short duration, for already the scoutcaught a momentarj' glimpse of a swarthy warrior cautiously ad vancing towards the cover so recently occupied by a fellow companion. Now, too, the attaek in front was re sumed with increasing fury, so as to require the incessant fire of both scouts to prevent tbe Indians from gaining the eminence ; and in a short time McClelland saw the warrior be hind the cover preparing for a leap to gain the fearful rook. The leap was. made, and the war- ter of the intrepid Neil Wathbnrn. celebrated in history as the renowned scout to Capt. Kenton's bloody Ken tu ok ins. i i .. el Onceimorii X s'nT meireiito,wjiteJ MlitaSmh am &3ar. ti rifuciif Ji aasswtze. - - . x-Lr- ."-., RiifaUv . - - i' .XI. rfjTlTP ""Sf-""! TttSli wf?1 - A " eaten exciting delicacies and who ' Jigh, and arrowing daily. Will you goes to bed at three in the moritingj forgive me if I venture upon the sub wearied but not satisfied, awakens Je(jt a little more? The trouble iii this QnJlbastjrandn -nrTntfeffTPnny Oysters Growing on Treas. Mr. O. H. WIHitms, a fellow of the Geographical Society of England, tells iu the Hartford Times how oysters inhabit the mangrove woods in Cuba. "For several years," he said, "I re sided on that island, and traveled there more than the ordinary run of foreigners, and have several times come across scenes which many peo ple would consider great curiosities one in particulnr. No doubt the reader will open his eyes at oysters growing on trees. Often have I seen the sneer of unbelief on the sce of the ignorant when thexfact whs men tioned ; but grow they do, and in im mense quantities, especially in the Southern part of the island. I have seen miles of trees, the lower stems and branches of which were literAlIj' covered with them, and main a good meal have I enjoyed with very little trouble of procuring, and not quite so i expensive as they are in London. I j simply placed the branches over the i fire, and, when opened I picked them nor, turning summerset, nis corpse out with n fork or nointed stiek I- tf rolled down toward his companions; again a mysterious agent had inter posed in their behalf. This second sacrifice cr.t dismay into the ranks of the assailants; and just as the sun was disappearing be hind the western hills, the foe with drew a short distance for the purpose of devising some new modes of at tack. The respite came most seasonably to the scouts, who had bravelj' kept their position, and boldly maintained the unequal fight from the middle of the day. Now, for the first time, was the girl missing aud the scouts supposed that through terror she had escaped to her former oaptors, or that she had been killed in the ficht. They were not long left to doubt, for in a few mo ments the girl was seen emerging from behind n roek, aud coming to them with a rifle iu her hand. During the heat of the fight she saw a warrior fall who had advanced some fifty yards before the main bo dy iu front. She at onee resolved to possess herself of his rifle, aud by crouching in the undergrowth she crept to the spot and succeeded in her enterprise, being all the time ex posed to the cross fire of the defend ers and the assailants. Her practiced eye had early noticed the fatal rock, and hers was the mysterious hand by which the two warriors had fallen In thiB peril, nothing was left other ; a ki fi,iM. i f ,u. fh.n t-n n j..: is . . " "uu U1UUU "J "'" "' "- f ,T Z "ve8BS0eay s Shawanese tribe. He it was who, they could ; this they resolved to do I i j i , ... ' . eu lo a. ten vears previous, had scalped the and advised the girl to escape to thf ' r-i r Ti j. i Tr, .. , f " w ine , family of the girl, and been her cap- keeping Fwar- These jeculiar shell fish are indigen ous in lagoons and swamps ou the coast, and as far as the tide will rise and the spray fly, so will they cling to the lower parts of the mangrove trees, sometimes four or five deep, the mangrove being one of the very few trees that flourish in saltwater." tor. Indians, and tell them she had been a captive to the scouts. RheRidnn! ., i. :., ; i xi! . . .ujiuutaiiuu luuumuuons or Death, and that in nreseno fmv . nrrnnndinfr ltille nrnn. . i- , , .1 " . J 6"ienD o -, i.-.uw.iiji ae ration, and echo on echo, till it e' as if ton thousand fiends woro In the west, dark clouds were now nnrl ir r Vsv f-li r-TTX rl n fl uuu ill UU UUU1 I'UU'tv IJUt? 1SSULTIXG THE FLAG. The Rev. Mr. Parks objected to eat ing his picnic dinner at Moro, Ca!., under the Americun flag, remarking that "that rag through which he had put many a bullet hole, disturbed his enjoyment. On the following Sunday as Mr. Parks took his place in the pul pit, he found an American flag hang ing from it. He was about to pull it down, when Mr. Miller, who placed it there, after hearing his unloyal speech at the picnic, quietly arose and presented a pistol, advising him to go on with his preaching and let the flag alone. Miller sat on the front seat with his finger on the trigger, ready for any allusion derogatory to the flair. At the conclusion of the serm on, Mr. Miller made a vote that the church had no further use for the ser vices of Mr. Parks, which was unani mously carried. Mr. Parks left Moro, aud another minister is wanted there. The drummers came down like wolves on the fold, their toes were alLfrosted, their noses all oold. Their weather-peeled bugles soon shone through the town, they gobbled the money and salted it down, then took a few orders and lit out of here, with their heads full of business and skins full of beer. Wives are presumptuous creatures a lock of their wn 4 I vt n- Lnwwnrn3 4 1 -v i InrtnmTn 1 . I. f a . with a rifle, and I will show you that f - K4UUtt"toB"!U " """ " """ "U.1U,B "triage, ana taite neTertheles3. The farm-laborers of ,uua. wiibnow you maciscoute ,u tuQ:r onntemnlated nierht it without askinir aftPi-wnrH , , , .. , , , w -s ... h niri'Miii Mr on rt t- niu. in itnr-i' i rrir juuiiwu .w uav UU.V w ui 4U KAJILX- rtl'H t0 "V.-11011.1.11"63 heavens shrouded in them; this! They always ask for ..uu.u v-uywwi. i'uiuitiu me ; darkneco night I it without asking afterward. from her sleep in about the same Con di' ion that a fst young man does af ter a -debauch. There is a space of time to put in after her rising, and to a woman who lives on the fiercest ex citements, an hour that has nothing exciting in it is an hour in purgatory. As a male debauchee is compelled lo take his cocktail at intervals during the day to ste.idy himself till the time comes for his regular drunk, so does the female debauchee require some stimulant during the terrible hours between nine a. m. and four p. m. to tn-keep her alive. This excitement the3' have found in gambling. Home of them play draw-poker, the regular same, but not many. That game, as we've beentold, requires firmness, de cision knowledge of human nature, judgment, dash, daring, and pluck qualities which the little dears are not, as a rule, blessed with. What they prefer is a game of pure chance, in which no skill is required. To this end a dozen of them will gather at a house, and make a pool of say $5 each, making a "pot" of $60. The twelve numbers are put into a box, and one drawn at random. The first number drawn is entitled to oue-half the pot, the second to one-fourth, nnd the third to the remaining fourth. This goes on for hours and hours till, in fact, it is time to dress for diuner. This game, simple as it is. is excit ing enough to satisfy their natures, particularly ns they can win a very large sum of money in a day. At one hotel in the upper part of the city, at which n great many rich men board, the ladies-made a game in which each put in $100 each time. One lady won nearly $-4,000, which was a lucky thing for her, as she was in debt, and wanted it. But how was it with the losers, who probably, were also in debt and wanted It likewise? EMIGRATION. Many good people have felt some alarm at the vast number of foreign born citizens whe, this season, have gone back to their former homes, sup posing that the panic and the conse quent scarcity of labor had driven them back to Europe. AH these fears are groundless. The fact is the dull ness of trade has told terribly upon the steamship lines, and all of there have been running at a loss. To get as much business as possible, they all put down the rates of passage to a very small sum to induce travel. Thousands upon thousands of well-to-do Irishmen, Germans and French men have taken advantage of the re duction to re-visit their old homes, and that is all there is of it. They will all return in the fall and bring others with them, who will be attraot ed by what they say of the "land of the free," but more by the evident prosperity of those who return. Emigration is not as brisk as iu for mer years, for the 3irnple reason that there is but little work now. But emigrauts are coming every day. whole matter is this: The committee of Plymouth Church, whose business is to get at the truth, are not attempt ing any thing of the sort. They are trying Beecher for eharges preferred against him; they are trying their level best, as the boys say, s clear him. It is not a jury that is trying this efe. Tbe eornmittee go about it as though each member was Beecher's attorney, whose business it was to bring in the great preacher "not guil ty" at all hazards; and Beeeher is fish ting the matter as a litigant, who does not hesitate to use every quibble to gain his ease, no matter what the facts may be. What does Henry Ward Beeeher, charged with adultery want of a lawyer before a church com niittee? lie did or did not commit the crime. Instead of fortifyinghim self with proof to show that he did not, he quibbles aud turns and twists He says in effect, "If I am guilty prove it. Prove that I committed the crime charged. Prove that I am not what I profess to be. Bring some one to swear that I have overstepped the line that should mark the limit of my profession." Tilton proposes to prove it. He submits letters that have passed be tween Beeeher and Elizabeth, his wife. He produces a document sign ed by Beeeher which is, actual ! a confession, and a thousand other doc uments, on which any jury in the country would send a man to the pen itentiary and which have satisfied the world as to the true state of the case. But all this won't do for Beeeh er. Knowing his power in the church, knowing the hold he has upon the popular mind, belays back on his rep utation as a preacher, and says: "I neiiher admit nor deny ; prove those letters to be genuine prove that the language in them ought justly to bear the construction you put upon them. I wash my hands of the whole of It. I don't like it. It is disagreeable." And what does Plymouth Church propose to do? WJ.y, instead of sift ing this matter instead of bringing all the parties to the bar, and compell ing them to tall tbe truth and the whole truth, they have decided in ad vance that Mr. Beeeher is innooeut. and have determined that their com mitted shall make a report to that ef fect. Then Mr. Beeeher is to tender his resignation as pastor, whieh they will not accept, and Henry Ward Beeeher will go on as before. This will happe. within this week mark it. But Tilton will not allow it to rest in this way. He fancies he has some rights, and if a church counsel wfil not do him justice he proposes to find a tribunal that will. There fore, he will take the matter from the ecclesiastical tp the legal tribunals. The moment the church whitewashes Beeeher, he will commence suit in the courts for dam ages for the seduction of his wife. This will bring the delicate people who know, but do not wish to testify, ing3 and uninfluenced by the magnet Ism of a great name will get at the cold solid truth. Don't moke up your minds till the courts have passed up on it. If Tilton makes good his case, down goes a gigantic fraud. If hs does not. the name of Beeeher will still shine as one of the elect, and no man in America will be more rejoiced than I. Fori dislike to see a great name besmeard I hate to see a great life clouded. But with all this be lenient to Til ton. He is a great man and a good one. I know whereof I speak, fori know him well. He has done unwise things and foolish things, he has the infirmities that belong to and are a part of genius; but his intentions have always been good, his impulses have always been right, and his fail ings always leaned toward virtue. If he fails iu this he must not be put down as bad. His aetionmust be as cribed to a malevolent influence that has made things seem as they were not. I know Theodore Tilton well, aad I assure those who read these lines that he is not a quaok, a dream er, or a fool. He is a strong mau in all things that he believes, and hie be liefs are as a rule right a weak man in policy, but an honest man so far as his light shows him what honesty is. He would not make a good member of Congress, but he has a place in the world, and he will alwavs fill it cred itably and well. A great genius is TheodoraMi a gocd audjuajfril man. He lmsTcoade- imatakes -which were .j - ia sT .' " 'j- lmosfrQpMm'te -crimes, but he j"-.-.. . jrf .- ,. . - aw.. . i rvr f fat.,1 TMHViLk-j-k inini wwrth ft m ids i.ii i siiir-"tiLsiiwjjtwumLixtf I - .uAataarnKZiBal! HIrei-9vm5at'iIv3H9, shown to him? Must it all go to the man whom he believes ha" injured him? It is a serious matter, and one that must not be hastily decided up on. BBEOIER EXPLAINS. And now comes Beeeber with his explanation. It is the old story re-told He claims to have been a particular friend of Mrs. Tilton's; that she came to him with stories of Theo dore's infidelities and erulaty, and that he advised her to leave him. After ward, Mouiton came to him and con vinced him that the allegations aerainst him were unfounded. Troubl ed at having made trouble, he signed the document known an his "Confes- wili not bear analysis. If what he says is true, he is the weakest man living. He admits to having submit ted to blackmail, to having walked in terror for four years, to have made all sorts of com promises and make-shifta, aud he only comes to the front with some sort of boldness now, by the act of an accuser. Innocent men do not "work in this way. Had Mr. Beeeher been innocent, he would have taken Theodore by the throat at the first of it, and dragged him before a tribunal. That would have established his in nocence beyond a pcradventure. He would have been the active man, and he would have made it lively for the gentlemen who were after him. By the way, Mr. Beeeher does not say a word about the other affairs that be has been credited with ; but per haps it wasn't necessary, a they were not under consideration. Heaven save the country from another thing of this kind. BUETMSS8 is picking up all the time, and the great city begins to have a lively ap pearance. Next month things will move still better. The country mer chants are are arriving by car-loads, nnd there is a trade doing. Let us re- Joo- Pietko. JMoftenpuch tctifcaayfSLsmaj rfrora the field of thought tfir5ugl? f which T bavoitraveled nnd giveiFtheny tsrthc-peafOaiftdetnthem- receive- them from one who wishes well, and would work for the good of humanity. If I have gathered any flowers from the steeps immortal, and offered them to my fellow-mortal, let them accept such immortelles and wear them until' one after another of us are gathered home, and we meet on the "other side" to give an account of the talents given us. If I have uttered what they consider error, regaid ltaavfrotn one who may err, like all finite be ings. But why is it they cannot under stand me, even because I have not spoken plainly to them? Politically I am a republican, and do not believe in going outside of the party to cor rect evils in It. I do not believe in. generating and warming into life a mongrel monster of n "tnird party," formed out of the discordant elements of defeated democrats and disaffected', sore-headed republicans; neither do I think it wise in the grangers to make themselves submissive nagSKon which they can ride into power. On the temperance question I think I have spoken out plain enough for drunkards, rum-sellers and tomper ance'neopleall to understand. On the;social question," if anyjof my friends think of making me pres ident when t"vvomen have their rights," I intend, instead of giving more license, to throw more restric tions around the marriage relation. I would have the standard of qualifi cations high, and that standard reaohed "before entering that' sacrec! relation. a But it is not my position ontbee- peatlon arwhloh pSS me"jm?mr?&mieyiig5S8i tell whether I am "spiritualist or orthadox " Is if necessary to bo un derstood that I should write out a creed and subscribe to "thirty nc articles? If so, dear reader, you may despair of over understandingjhie. If any one wishes to know my re ligious faith, to be brief, I would snv, I am s Christian.I know that term, now, is very indefinite, for there are so man' persons, of every shade of moral attainment and religious belief, who call themselves christians, thafe It is Impossible to tell one's faith by that term. My idea of Christianity is, that it is a system of doctrines and teachings to develope and educate the spirit of man for a more advanced state of existence after the death- sion," in which ie wishes hiraseif dead, etc. Mr. Beecher's explanation ohange. That the "Son of God" is A correspondent of the Chicago Tri bune says that the gall of tbe rattle snake, taken into tbe stooiach imme diately aftfr being bitten by that rep tile, waa sure cure for the bite. Aa a roewwre of precaution, he rifeeeeied a ratUeenaihe. and carefully preserved the gall of the creature in a small bot tle. In the course of harvesting, a young man m hu employ was bitten by a rattlesnake, and. almost instant ly, wae thrown into paroxysms of great pain, and began to show the us ual signs of virulent poiwn. Mr. Thomas ran for his antidote, mixed of water, and, by dint of great persua sion, got tbe patient to swallow it He was, at the time, in great agony the wound and ajacent parts being swollen, and turning purple. The ef fect of this singular potion was almost instantaneous. The young man be- came suddenly quiet, and vers soon : an expression of the Chriat nature; that he took on a material form so that when "he was lifted up-he might draw all men unto him" by imparting -to them inspirations so that they might be Christ-iiko. To effect-ibis he has angelic agencies. There over has been a communication between the seen and the unseen worlds. Some are conscious of this through spiritual development. Others are not. All will be in the "fulness of time.' The Bible I regard us-a record of spiritual revelations from beginning to end. That holy men of old spoke as they were inspired by the spirit; and the reason it is not better under stood is because the "natural man dte ccrneth not the things of the spirit tbey are spiritually discerned." Re ligious faith is in a traasitlon-slats now, in the public mind. Tho tima is not far distant when thar will be christianized spiritualism and a spir itualized christlaning. Thua endath tbfc chapter os my faith. Je3j:,'btte Hakdin. London, Nebraska. Worth Knowing. a oorrejerd ent of the Country Gentleman says if copperas and saltpetre water is used around pear trees, the trees will show tbe effects in a large ylrfd of fruit. He tried this on a Burtiett pear tree that had yielded no fruit for two years previous. That very year it yiehiad 155 large, flue pears, and the follow ing year 256 targe ones, and is still d ing finely. If pear trees want iron, whieh most soil are deficient in, sul phapte of iron, or copperas, is a gso way to supply it. Christendom paid last year fiW thev support of her war system, two thous and millions of dollars. Chrlstiaos all who profess and call themservas by that name paid ;for missions in tbsr the gall of the reptile in a half a glass fseme t5le. fle millions of doHaTS. A New York paper gravel 3 observeg that the suicide of a farmer, which it notices, "is singularly strange, itNw raueh as he has not been iu the habrti of doing sch things." Thk silver beet is being raised, Canada a a cron for nlowinc imtWr declared the great pain had ceased. ' as manure. It produces a mass of ' leaves thirty inches high, which fur- Light griefs are loquacious; deep nish a large quantity of green 11)1111 sorrow has no tongue. , urr. i